Abstract
Equine neutrophils were combined with Haemophilus equigenitalis (contagious equine metritis organism; CEMO) or Escherichia coli in low- and high-antibody-titer serum to evaluate the neutrophils ability to phagocytize and kill these bacteria. More E. coli than CEMO were phagocytized at each time period. After 120 min in low-antibody-titer serum, 56.3% of the E. coli and 34.3% of the CEMO were phagocytized. A total of 45% of CEMO and 74.9% of E. coli were phagocytized by 120 min when neutrophils were in high-antibody-titer serum. More than 75% of the ingested E. coli and 90% of the ingested CEMO were killed within 210 min of incubation. Fewer E. coli than CEMO were killed at any given time period. Ultrastructural examination showed CEMO to be degraded in the neutrophil. Degradation was the most extensive in neutrophils in high-titer serum. It is suggested that CEMO is a pathogenic extracellular bacterium incapable of prolonged intracellular survival and that it is slower to be phagocytized than a nonpathogenic E. coli.
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